After the ordeal, Ms Amour, who was in South Africa to promote her “Stop Rape. Educate” campaign, describes her feelings of “shame, disgust, suffering”. She also relates the feelings of helplessness that can be experienced by rape victims.

“I’m here, alone, and any DNA has been wiped away in the shower. The South African police will just roll their eyes when I walk in. Feel sicker than ever now.”

She posted two further pictures – including one of her at hospital with a “rape kit” in front of her knees.

And while she acknowledges how gruelling it can be, she encourages other victims to speak out as she has.

“Dealing with cops is tough and the rape kit is the last thing I want – tools and metal instruments and combs all up in my private parts…But this is what I stand for.

“I tell you guys to speak up every single day and I know that I need to practice what I preach.”

She finishes with a message: “No matter what a person does, it is not an invitation for rape.

“It doesn’t matter if I kissed him. It doesn’t matter if he was drunk. It doesn’t matter if I said yes to a shower.

“I never said he could get violent with me. I never said he could make me bleed. I never said he could rape me.”

She later spoke to Marie Claire about her decision to ‘blog’ about the alleged assault in real time.

“I immediately knew that I couldn’t keep what had happened a secret. So the first thing I did was take a picture and write a post, describing what had happened.

“It was almost an intuitive thing. I was still in the bathroom – in the crime scene. I don’t even think I’d stood up. I just typed and typed.”